Monday Morning Links

by | Feb 21, 2022 | Daily Links | 299 comments

More anger issues from an angry man.

I understand the Olympics are done. OK. Juwan Howard is a dipshit. He needs to go and TTUN fans need to never mention Woody Hayes and Clemson ever again. Liverpool won, Man City lost. There’s a bit of a race to the EPL championship again. And that’s it for sports.

I didn’t expect this to happen. Even though I probably should have. Authoritarians gonna authoritarian.

When creepshotting goes wrong. Sounds like some partisan prudery here, but I’d have to see the photos to know if I’m right.

A nice old woman.

Good on them. If only we’d follow their lead.

The camera doesn’t lie. Have a nice day, asshole.

Tough love. Mom gets it.

That region has gone to the birds.

This is just what we need. We should shut off all access to the city and Long Island just to be sure we’re safe.  Ten years ought to be enough.

Locusts descend on city. Well, kind of.

No shit, Sherlock. Now wish them all luck and go back home.

Here’s a nice song for you. And…here’s a second one. Hope you enjoy them both.

And enjoy this paid holiday, all you government and corporate people. The rest of us will just enjoy a regular Monday.

About The Author

sloopyinca

sloopyinca

299 Comments

  1. AlexinCT

    I didn’t expect this to happen. Even though I probably should have. Authoritarians gonna authoritarian.

    What scares me is how nobody that should be saying “WTF?” in western governments is doing so. They are all acting as if it is not happening and trying their best to paint the people asking for freedom as terrorists…

    Think about that..

    • juris imprudent

      “One man’s freedom fighter is another man’s terrorist”, no?

      • AlexinCT

        Looks like the supposedly elected representatives of the various “wester democracies” (in quotes on purpose) has decided that entities like Antifa and BLM which murder, burn, loot, and destroy are freedom fighters, while anyone that doesn’t accept the various actions to institute their Great Reset, even if al they do is hold outdoor parties or demnd their government provide proof after telling the people blatantly obvious lies, is a terrorist.

      • Compelled Speechless

        It’s not hard to figure out. BLM and Antifa ultimately want to support and expand the state as it is and make the grift work for them. Truckers stand in the way of the state’s power grabs and only want to be left alone. Not giving the state unlimited power = terrorism.

      • hayeksplosives

        BLM and Antifa vote for whoever the Dems put up as a candidate.

        It’s really not that hard to figure out.

      • Not Adahn

        Freedom Fighters suggest that the government could possibly, in some circumstances, be wrong. It’s possible to #resist a nazi, but to take up arms against the government? Terrorist.

  2. Tres Cool

    whaddup doh’

  3. The Late P Brooks

    Eastern Washington was of course much colder. Until this winter, MacDonald, a native Southern Californian, had never shoveled snow. But their new house is twice as big as their Los Angeles home, cost less than half as much and is a five-minute commute from City Hall, where MacDonald works as Spokane’s director of community and economic development.

    He arrives each day to tackle a familiar conundrum: how to prevent Spokane from developing the same kinds of problems that people like him are moving there to escape.

    “I’m realizing more and more how important the future prosperity of this city is about getting housing right,” he said. “If we don’t, it’s going to track more closely with what happened in Los Angeles.”

    Central planning will save us.

    • AlexinCT

      Funny how central planning by idiots, controlling the narrative – using the obvious lie it is to prevent information as long as you understand misinformation is anything they don’t like or want you to hear – and news, and introducing some scoring mechanism, be it a Kung Flu passport or a social score, while punishing anyone and any entity that exposes this racket they are running on us, seem to be the only solution acceptable to the cadre of credentialed elite morons that can’t seem to even wipe their ass clean without getting shit on everything, huh?

    • trshmnstr the terrible

      The cycle brings bitterness and “Don’t Move Here” bumper stickers

      Of course, this is false. The “dont move here” bumper stickers are actually “don’t californicate my Texas” bumper stickers. They don’t seem to mind people (like me) who relocated from flyover country, but it sure seems to stick in their craw when companies dump a few thousand of San Francisco’s finest into our neighborhoods. 100 people per day are moving into my suburb, and it’s having an impact. Whether or not the voting patterns have changed (I’ll be curious to see how my area fares in 2022), the culture has shifted.

      The article is interesting in an unintentional way, because it addresses one of the issues I’ve noticed. All those urban Californians move into sleepy suburb X and start demanding apartments, townhomes, integrated residential city cores, and duplexes. The old timers balk at the change in culture and the change in population density, but are told to sit down and shut up by the enlightened locusts.

      • Not Adahn

        Can confirm: Texans think it’s obvious that everyone would want to move to TX. NYers seem to think outsiders are carpetbagging here to steal their stuff. The Mayor of Albany (pre-Cindy Sheehan) declared that they needed to bring in new residents to “lower the tax burden on real New Yorkers.”

      • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

        When I was a kid in the ’80s, it was a big thing to put a sticker on your car that said “CALIFONIA NATIVE”. This shit has been going on for a loooooong time.

      • Rat on a train

        To be fair, California was a nicer place in the 80s. It was ruined in part by the influx of non-natives.

      • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

        Point.

      • Tonio

        The use of the term “carpet-bagging” is hilarious since the original meaning was Yankees who moved to the Reconstruction-era South.

      • Not Adahn

        Occasionally I try to be subtle.

      • slumbrew

        “ outsiders are carpetbagging ”

        But enough about the Clintons…

      • rhywun

        This process has been going on for a couple hundred years; there’s nothing new about it.

        I am not sure why it’s so often in the news lately.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        I am not sure why it’s so often in the news lately.

        Because this country has all but split in two, and people either fear the hordes coming from the foreign land or they look in curiosity at the people abandoning utopia.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        It’s interesting to me that there seems to be a somewhat effective inoculation against falling into the thought worker mindset. In my (limited) experience, those who have spent some time working with their hands have aligned with the physical workers. Those who have never bothered to get their hands dirty are reliably prog-fascist.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        Those *thought workers* who have, *in the past*, spent some time working with their hands…

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Very much so. It’s a reliable indicator.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        I’ll also add that manufacturing a physical product tends to bring a more reality-based mindset to people.

      • rhywun

        I’ve been laptop-class my whole life and never fallen into that trap.

        It really just takes rubbing a couple brain-cells together. The whole banging pans at 7 o’clock thing, while silly, seemed to indicate some recognition of these things from the laptop class but then they went back to instinct and vilify them now.

        It is baffling.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        I’ve been laptop-class my whole life and never fallen into that trap.

        As with everything else, it’s a generalization.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        Rhy, you came to mind when I wrote out the original comment. I think your background (at least from what you’ve posted here) exposes that you’ve had more than a passing encounter with reality. You’ve seen successes and the consequences thereof. You’ve seen failures and the consequences thereof.

        This is in stark contrast to some of my high school classmates who grew up in an upper middle class lifestyle, getting upper middle grades that put them in an upper middle university. Then they graduated into an upper middle job that pays for an upper middle class lifestyle. The worst they had to deal with was mommy and daddy getting a divorce and the incessant shuttling around that came as consequence of that split. Electricity came from the plug. Food came from the grocery store. The car got fixed at the dealership, and the plumber fixed the sink.

      • slumbrew

        I’m laptop class – hell, I’ve worked from home for a decade – but I’m definitely not part of that tribe.

        Maybe it’s was the summer construction jobs but more likely that my father lifted himself up by the bootstraps; we were middle-middle class, living hand to mouth for most of my childhood. I was wearing thrift shop clothes long before it was cool.

        My father didn’t have kids so much as he had a captive labor force. Our big, old house needed a lot of work, and only rarely were professionals involved.

      • Compelled Speechless

        This is a perfect description Trashy. I work in residential construction in Idaho, the state that is growing the fastest per capita in the nation right now due to the Calexit (some Oregon & Washington too, but I’d honestly say 80% of all buyers are Cali). I get to meet everyone of them and discuss. First thing they do is joke about not changing the place and how they’re not “those Californians.” It does not occur to them how deeply ingrained culture is and how that is separate (not mutually exclusive) from politics. They don’t understand that by bringing the culture with them, they also change everything politically, aesthetically, morally ect….

        They are, as you’d expected almost entirely laptop workers. They are, as you’d likely suspect on average, far more rude, entitled, aggressive, litigious…. It is remarkable how, despite being able to pull in serious income at their jobs, they have no skills outside of whatever their job is. I mean, literally don’t know how to tighten a set screw kind of clueless. They usually don’t have any sorts of hobbies that involve any skill or knowledge as though they simply exist to be the perfect cogs in the machines that pay them so handsomely. Despite this, their level of self-satisfaction and their ability to look down at the people that work with their hands is virtually limitless.

      • UnCivilServant

        their level of self-satisfaction … is virtually limitless.

        I really don’t get that. The most unsatisfying thing about my career has been the fact that I don’t make anything. There is no tangible evidence of value created by my efforts.

      • Tonio

        Thanks for linking that, Scruffy.

        Also, don’t know if you saw my request for a writeup about the Virginia LP. We’d love to publish something on that.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Ok, I’ll put my grammar hat on and try to writes real good for once.

      • Plisade

        Makers and Takers.

        Btw, thanks for the substack references. I’m trying to move away from all other news than what I subscribe to, what I want to pay for a la carte, and substack seems the place to go now. But I’m concerned about trapping myself in a bubble. Looking for critical thinkers like dude above.

      • Plisade

        Nothing new under the sun.

      • Plisade

        In the map of this article, the blue in the south that makes a U below the Appalachians… I compared it to a topo of the US. The blue seems to sit in a valley down there, and off to the left follows the Mississippi down to the gulf. I don’t know what it means, but there seems to be some geographic influence as well as a big city thing.

        /shrugs

      • rhywun

        I think the big non-urban patches of blue are probably hard union supporters where all those jobs dried up.

      • Spartacus

        That’s mostly the Black Belt.

      • Plisade

        Black Belt… very interesting. Gonna read up on that. Thanks.

      • Pine_Tree

        Short answer – other than urban centers like Atlanta, that’s what’s (partially) called The Black Belt, plus large areas along the Mississippi. It started as a geography thing (region only suitable in colonial days for plantation agriculture), turned into an economic thing (same), had therefore relatively large slave populations, whose descendents are still large portions of the populations, and what you’re seeing are racially-identifiable voting patterns.

      • westernsloper

        + 1 bike lane

      • Rat on a train

        Nah. Share the road regardless of whether the road is safe to share.

    • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

      Yeah, no shit it’s colder. My parents moved just south of there (Pullman) in ’68 from the Bay Area and immediately got nailed by the worst winter in, well, forever. -40 and they had a convertible Mustang.

    • Pope Jimbo

      Do you dare doubt the wisdom of the planners?!

      Minnesoda mass transit planners are crowing about how bus lines (and train lines) spur “investments”

      The launch of a new bus rapid transit line serving the east metro is still three years away, but it’s already spurring development.

      This summer in Oakdale, construction is expected to start on affordable apartments with 71 units for people with low income or who have intellectual and developmental disabilities, and the Gold Line is the catalyst.

      The $26 million complex, which also will include 21 market-rate units, will be the first new project to spring up along the bus line that starting in 2025 will provide all-day service along a 10-mile corridor between downtown St. Paul and Woodbury. But it is unlikely to be the last.

      The rest of the story is a bunch of planners touting a study that shows people build next to mass transit. Of course, mass transit means “near a road that a bus might drive on”. The story didn’t explain how this causal link operates given that mass transit ridership has dropped by more than half and shows no signs of recovering.

      • Rat on a train

        If you build mass transit, people will build next to it. If you build roads, people will build next to it.

      • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

        They tried that bullshit in Sacramento, extending light rail out to Alkalai Flats, the bum-ridden area north of downtown. Built condos and townhouses out there, but no businesses came in so it was just light industrial and the homeless. No one took the rail.

      • Pope Jimbo

        Uffda. From the same paper: Gold Line will cost $70M more than expected.

        Why? Because they are gaming the stats to make them eligible for Federal Transportation $$$.

        Transit planners are confident the addition of parking and contingency funds will boost the project’s rating with the FTA and qualify it for federal money.

        “There’s an equation, a model, they have for park-and-ride stalls which really do drive ridership, and the ridership makes you more competitive for federal dollars,” said Christine Beckwith, Gold Line project manager.

        Beckwith said the transit investment will help fuel an economic recovery as the COVID-19 pandemic eases.

        “This is how we’ll get to our jobs and there will be jobs created to build” and operate it. “These are good jobs.”

        It would be nice if we could have some sort of feedback that resulted in planners like Beckwith getting fired if those jobs never materialize.

      • Fourscore

        Reminds me of the time we were taking inventory and the manager asked me, “Do we want a high or low inventory?” I said’ Depends if we’re buying or selling but since we’re keeping, let’s go with an accurate inventory”.

      • AlexinCT

        Now do riots & crime!

      • Tonio

        Don’t forget the interruptions to businesses and parking by all the construction to install those fancy, uneccessary platforms for the fancy buses. That killed at least one restaurant here that was driven out of business because all the nearby parking was a construction zone, and patrons didn’t think they’d be able to access the business via sidewalk.

        Granted, the fancy buses are designed to need the platforms, but that’s an inherent design flaw making the whole service way more expensive and complicated than it needs to be. And, as always, to give the mayor’s friends contracts to construct that.

    • wdalasio

      He arrives each day to tackle a familiar conundrum: how to prevent Spokane from developing the same kinds of problems that people like him are moving there to escape.

      I’ll offer him a suggestion – tell people in LA that anyone who’d actually like him or support him should probably stay in LA and anyone who’d be opposed to him might consider relocating.

  4. Festus

    Waittaminute! There were Olympic Games? Oh well.

    • AlexinCT

      I thought that shit was over too and everyone had gotten their fill of CCP ass swab testing…

    • creech

      Did that American girl who won gold representing totalitarian China decide to stay in the glorious country of her ancestor? Probably not because she can come back to America and be welcomed as a hero on “The View” and similar shows.

    • Festus

      Good God Man, are you trying to TEdS us?

      • juris imprudent

        Just looking forward to retirement.

      • Fourscore

        Careful, JI,it comes quickly and then it’s almost over. Don’t wait too long.

      • juris imprudent

        I had originally planned for this April but deferred it one year (when I’ll be Medicare eligible). And not one day longer.

      • Fourscore

        Good for you! Wanna go fishing?

    • SDF-7

      Huh… I was expecting this.

  5. AlexinCT

    The camera doesn’t lie. Have a nice day, asshole.

    The most vitriolic mask mandaters (not to be confused with two dudes on a date) always get caught without the mask. see it isn’t about the mask. It also isn’t about safety. it is about making sure the peasants obey. If you needed any more proof that these assholes wanting to torch your life for not wanting to, or even forgetting to, wear a mask are evil, that they simply want to mask the serfs so they can clearly let the serfs know their place, all while they go maskless whenever they feel like it – cause they are the elite – immediately making it obvious this isn’t about any sort of health measure, then look at examples like this.

    • Not Adahn

      mask mandaters (not to be confused with two dudes on a date)

      OMG such polyphobia I can’t even.

    • Festus

      It has always been about control. Someone here forwarded an article from Gordilock’s thread. These people live in the virtual world. Most of us live in the physical one. They don’t understand why we lose it when folk in the tippy-tappy pajama brigade start complaining about the people that actually sweat for a living. We were heroes not that long ago. Now we’re facists. Eat the rich.

      • rhywun

        We were heroes not that long ago. Now we’re facists.

        That is one of the more enraging parts of all of this.

        They turned on a dime the second Biden got elected and the Trump Vaccine which all of them declared they would never take suddenly became mandatory for all those heroes.

    • Rat on a train

      Respect for the woman not backing down when the board member tried the outrage redirect and the police intimidation.

      • Not Adahn

        Since stretching definitions is en vogue these days, would siccing a cop on someone be assault with a deadly weapon?

      • Festus

        Kudos to the Cop for just walking away. How often does that happen?

      • Rat on a train

        It is SW Virginia. In NoVA that woman would have been taken down by a gang of cops and thrown in jail

      • Tonio

        ^This.

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        Yep. Which also points to the problem of police being involved at all. Schools, airports, etc need to hire private security, with all of the liabilities and restrictions that goes with it, rather than have what is essentially private law enforcement who unquestionably follow their orders (expect in this case).

      • Festus

        He was ready to strong-arm her away until the other Board member shut her shit down. That’s why she freaked out. More of this, please.

      • slumbrew

        I’m guessing the other board member doesn’t love the chairwoman

  6. Not Adahn

    an incident where a woman was reportedly seriously injured after an interaction with a police officer on a horse

    Injuries occurred. Horses were present. Interactions cannot yet be confirmed. Procedures were followed.

    I seem to have missed CNN reporting about the mounties lying and saying “nobody was injured at all, even though a filthy antixaxx0r nazi threw a bicycle at our beautiful delicate equine.”

    • Festus

      It’s all a lie.

  7. Not Adahn

    The board chairwoman got up at that point, walked around the dais and past Vaught, who said, ‘We’re coming for your seat.’

    ‘You can have it,’ Kass shot back.

    So, lawglibs: that counts as a resignation, right? Does it also count as her transferring her seat to Vaught?

      • Pope Jimbo

        The problem is that a plummeting student base does not lead to firings, terminations and such. Our teachers are going on strike because they deserve more money for all the trauma they’ve had to endure. Sure the student population has dropped by more than 10%, but no way that means that even one administrator should lose their job.

      • AlexinCT

        This is the first time in my lifetime that I have seen the adults that constantly talk about how important the kids, which are our future, tell the rest of us that they are going to be seriously fucking over the kids so the adults – themselves – can avoid being inconvenienced.

    • Festus

      I watched that before I went to work tonight. It was delicious!

  8. The Late P Brooks

    But he said downtown residents had woken to fencing and a “very heavy police presence” as well as checkpoints throughout the city.

    Freedom isn’t free.

    • Not Adahn

      Buck-o-five?

      • AlexinCT

        At least it isn’t Shree-Fiddy…

      • Festus

        3 Trillion Dollahs, same as Downtown.

    • Pope Jimbo

      When you need an army of goons and miles of fencing to protect yourself, shouldn’t you question if your actions are really what the people want? I mean you are supposed to be the representative of the folks back home, right?

      • Rebel Scum

        Surely, you jest. Castreau is a man of the people.

  9. The Late P Brooks

    “One man’s freedom fighter is another man’s terrorist”, no?

    And the winners write the history books.

    • Not Adahn

      I thought winners fucked the prom queen?

      • Festus

        Winners fuck the Prom Queen’s big sister.

      • Rat on a train

        Drag queens can be prom queens.

      • Festus

        Don’t drag one of my best victories, Rat!

    • juris imprudent

      And the winners write the history books.

      Thus is the Arc of History refuted.

  10. Festus

    Funny thing – When the horse ran over the cripple, Judi’s first thought was for the horse. “That rider asshole kicked!” Horse girls be crazy.

    • Drake

      Turns out she was not only disabled but a Mowhawk woman – so excluded from the Twink’s orders. This won’t go over well in that community.

      • Festus

        Hey! Who you calling a community?

  11. robc

    Hitting a coach is less bad than hitting a player.

    Otoh, if Woody had hit an uga player, I would recommend him for sainthood.

  12. The Late P Brooks

    The article is interesting in an unintentional way, because it addresses one of the issues I’ve noticed. All those urban Californians move into sleepy suburb X and start demanding apartments, townhomes, integrated residential city cores, and duplexes. The old timers balk at the change in culture and the change in population density, but are told to sit down and shut up by the enlightened locusts.

    I am all in favor of mixed use. I’m in favor of no zoning at all, but radically altering established neighborhoods by decree is not a smart plan.

    • robc

      This.

      Mixed use. No zoning, except possibly for heavy industrial. And time limits (25 years) on deed restrictions.

      • creech

        Some deed restrictions are o.k. In Penna. you used to be able to have a graveyard on your farm (esp. when the local Quakers kept you out of their graveyard for joining the revolutionary army to oppose King George III. Anyway, generations later the family sold the land outside of the family and put in a deed restriction that required future owners keep the graveyard intact and accessible (over 100 folks buried there). Well, another 100 years go by, somehow the restriction gets “overlooked” by subsequent owners, and there’s now a 300+ home community on the farm, and the desecrated graveyard is buried (pun) under someone’s driveway.

      • Gustave Lytton ????

        the family sold the land outside of the family

        Stated vs revealed preference in action.

      • robc

        I think the key is to sell all of the land except the graveyard. Instead of a deed restriction, separate that part out and continue to hold it.

      • creech

        Would have been the smart thing to do but in 1830 probably didn’t foresee that owners in 1970 would not be trustworthy.

    • trshmnstr the terrible

      I am all in favor of mixed use. I’m in favor of no zoning at all

      I’m in favor of no zoning over short-sighted zoning (or actively harmful zoning as we’re seeing more and more), but I’m not sure where I sit on “good” zoning versus no zoning. Most everywhere I’ve lived over the past couple decades has switched from single family neighborhoods on quarter acre or bigger lots to mixed high-density neighborhoods, lofted residential/commercial, and row after row of the ugliest little townhomes, all tightly managed by HOAs.

      I find myself aligned with the guy in the article. I don’t mind those developments existing in my city, but I don’t want to live in or near them. The traffic issues alone from the increase in density are enough to keep me away.

      I’ve also noticed the pattern that the increase of these higher density, lower cost housing developments seem to invariably precede, by a few years, a culture shift in the direction of the local urban core. There’s a cycle where a new town on the outskirts is discovered, it grows fantastically as a first wave of suburbanites look to escape the inner suburbs, the city gets a reputation for good schools and being a great place to live, the city managers start trying to increase density to keep up with the growth, a second wave comes in to take advantage of the “good schools and amenities”, the city gets crowded, and the decline takes hold. Eventually, the people who have stuck around since the beginning see their once small conservative town having to battle CRT and rising social issues. Meanwhile, the cycle has started all over again in the next town out.

      My high school made the national news for CRT crap a few months back. My wife’s high school (she was homeschooled, but the one she would have gone to) fired their superintendent in December over CRT crap. We lived a few years a stone’s throw from Loudoun County VA and were seriously contemplating moving across the border line. Good zoning may not have been able to hold back the cycle, but bad zoning sure as hell accelerated it.

      I’m not sure there’s a point to all of this besides expressing my internal back and forth on the topic.

  13. Drake

    A rant from a former Canadian cop (who refused to get the shot).

    In one fucking weekend, these psychotic knuckle dragging ‘shaved apes’ in Ottawa managed to do more irreparable harm to the image and institution of policing than the media, the politicians, BLM/ANTIFA, and all of George Soros’s money could in several years.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      Sociopaths make up about 3 to 5% of the general population. That’s a lot of potential jackboots.

    • R.J.

      Speaking as a shaved ape, I object to that micro-aggression.

  14. Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

    I gotta say, I like the queen. Not a bad old broad, and a fuck ton better than her son.

    • Drake

      But probably not the greatest parent ever, judging from her 2 sons.

      • Festus

        Three sons, two daughters. They are febrile folk!

      • Gender Traitor

        I only count one daughter, but maybe Anne’s packed on some pounds over the years.

      • Festus

        You’re right. I always count Margaret. Funny!

      • Mojeaux

        Diana was assassinated.

        Otherwise, they seem like no worse than any other royal throughout the ages and probably better.

  15. The Late P Brooks

    Officials vowed to end the protests through unprecedented protocols, including the Emergencies Act. The law allows the Canadian government to tap into military forces, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has made it clear troops will not be needed.

    They hammer that endlessly.

    “Our Lord Protector Trudeau, in his most beneficent grace, has deemed it unnecessary to send in the troops to crush the insurgency.Demonstrate your gratitude, peasants.”

    • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

      They are scared shitless of having another Kent state moment.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        I don’t think so.

        The military told Trudeau to pound sand a couple of weeks ago. I don’t get the impression he has any support there and is framing it to suit his needs.

        Justin doesn’t seem to be that concerned about putting down what he sees as a rebellion against him even if it means blood in the streets.

      • juris imprudent

        Joffrey Trudeau?

      • Festus

        Canadians are not naturally violent people. We have a very long fuse. Justin lit the fuse. Watch and learn. There is a very good reason that the Germans feared us in both conflicts and poor little Justy hasn’t studied his history.

      • WTF

        Canadians are not naturally violent people.

        Hockey says “hi”.

      • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

        We are not quite to that point yet. He needs it to be mostly bloodless, as he is still at a tipping point with the population. Canada isn’t the US, with its multiple populations that hate each other.

    • Brawndo

      When you militarize the police, saying you won’t use the military is disingenuous

      • Compelled Speechless

        ???. They’ve spent the last couple of decades spreading out the military to every one of our neighborhoods. Even college police departments often have armored vehicles and SWAT teams that have military grade weapons. It has been obvious what the end goal is to anyone paying attention. Public safety = safety of the elites FROM the public.

    • Rebel Scum

      The nameless, badgeless goons in riot gear with rifles notwithstanding…

  16. westernsloper

    The RCMP froze 206 financial products, including bank and corporate accounts; disclosed the information of 56 entities associated with vehicles, individuals and companies; shared 253 bitcoin addresses with virtual currency exchangers; and froze a payment processing account valued at $3.8 million, Duheme told the news conference.

    JFC! They just ruined a bunch of lives. Mutherfuckers.

    • rhywun

      They could have defused the whole thing with a simple dialog, rather than going full-on fascist.

      I’m thinking they wanted to go full-on fascist.

      • juris imprudent

        What good is power if it isn’t used to crush those who refuse to adore you?

      • Not Adahn

        Picking up chicks?

        /Kissinger

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Trudeau was in a bind. He has no arguments other that his go-to narratives of fascism, racism, homophobia, etc…

        He couldn’t possibly debate because he would lose and he’s not going to take that chance.

    • Drake

      And now this tyrant is going to make her financial tyranny permanent.

      • westernsloper

        Maybe I am just an overreacting conspiracy nut but I find this shit absolutely terrifying. “Due to your support of group X, all your assets have been seized.”

      • Sean

        “Due to your social credit score…”

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        This is why getting the fuck out of dodge has been so high a priority for me. Granted, I thought it would be a gradual drift towards capping and/or seizing retirement accounts. I didn’t figure they’d go straight for seizing bank accounts of wrongthinkers.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        The need for control jumped ahead of the need for cash.

    • The Last American Hero

      But but but Bitcoin fixes everything!!!!!

      /libertarians that don’t understand the State will brook no competition

      • Compelled Speechless

        Right. This isn’t that hard for the state to get around. They’ll outlaw cash and only allow the major banks under their control to be the ones to make payments to all vendors. Without cash, you’ll have a really hard time turning your Bitcoin into spendable currency if the banks won’t accept your money without proof that it didn’t come from converted crypto. You’ve got to be pretty hardcore to put up with getting everything including groceries through the black market.

      • Mojeaux

        That is why I cashed out.

  17. Sean

    I took a personal day for today.

    • slumbrew

      Aren’t you the boss?

      • Sean

        Yes, and I answer to the owner.

      • slumbrew

        Ah, thought you owned the business

  18. The Late P Brooks

    Canada’s Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour officials were looking into how the blockades had been funded.
    “We’ve launched inquiries to see whether there was foreign influence. I’ve raised the issue with Secretary Blinken, my counterparts also within Canada have raised issues, because we’re very preoccupied with the financing, through crowdsourcing, first, and also the disinformation campaign linked to it,” she said.

    Go ahead, fucko. Declare war on America. Joe will surrender.

  19. rhywun

    Today in “in over his head“.

    Mayor Eric Adams admitted Wednesday that vaccine mandates don’t work — yet he’s still going ahead with firing city workers who refuse to show proof they got their shots.

    There’s the usual, debatable “vax good!” boilerplate but overall they make a good case against the illegal mandates. Bonus sportsball hypocrisy content.

    • Certified Public Asshat

      Where did he actually admit they don’t work?

      • rhywun

        Looks like at a press conference.

    • Tundra

      Another good one. Thanks, Holiness!

    • Not Adahn

      Hmmm.

      Assuming that more ex-con jurors = more jury nullification = fewer ex-con jurors, where does the equilibrium wind up?

  20. The Late P Brooks

    The Big Bad Wolf is circling the flock

    Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Sunday said Ukraine may witness “a significant amount of combat power move very quickly to take Kyiv” if Russia invades Ukraine.

    Austin, during an appearance on ABC’s “This Week,” said the international community should “look at what’s on the other side of the Ukrainian border” to discern the type of force Russia would use in the event of a military incursion against Ukraine.

    “So in terms of the types of things that could happen, one only need to look at what’s on the other side of the Ukrainian border,” Austin said.

    He specifically pointed to sightings of tanks, armored vehicles, artillery and rocket forces, calling the situation “potentially very, very dangerous.”

    “We see a lot of tanks and armored vehicles there. We see a lot of artillery. We see rocket forces,” Austin said.

    I do not believe a single word any of these shitbags say.

  21. Sean

    So, the heavy handed crimes against the protestors, is it the RCMP, or the OPP, or both? Anyone know?

    • westernsloper

      Both as far as I know.

      • Festus

        I saw RCMP. They had cops from as far away as here.

    • Brawndo

      OPP? Yea, you know me.

  22. Festus

    Whelp, signing off for now. Hope that all of you lovelies have a great one! I’ll try not to shit my shorts today. Better food, better mileage.

    • LCDR_Fish

      Again will recommend the Ricochet.com podcast by Jon Gabriel interviewing Gray Connelly- 3 weeks old but still very relevant. Posted link yesterday.

  23. LCDR_Fish

    Morning reminder for VA glibs to post in the forum – update your status for the Gourmeltz meet-up on Sat. Thanks

    • Rat on a train

      I am flexible on the time.

    • Tonio

      Thanks for the reminder.

      • Not Adahn

        her victims — all of whom were between the ages of 14 and 17 — and offered them items such as vape pens in exchange for sex.

        14-17 year old males have to be bribed to have sex? RUFKM? Maybe Alex Jones is onto something.

      • Pope Jimbo

        “We are devastated at this point,” a mother of one of the victims, who asked to remain anonymous, told the outlet. “I cannot in words describe what it feels like to be going through what we’re going through right now. It is every emotion that you can imagine. And none of them happy.”

        I can only imagine the hell that poor husband is going through right now. Trying to give his son a fist bump on the down low while publicly agonizing with his wife about how terrible it all is. If he has daughters it only gets worse because they are all going to want a piece of the drama too.

      • EvilSheldon

        “Human trafficking by patronizing prostitution.”

        :rolleyes:

      • Pope Jimbo

        What? Prostitution in Tennessee? Four Pinocchios! There isn’t any ice on the lakes there.

      • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

        Wait, is that Krysten Sinema?

      • juris imprudent

        She had to bribe them with vapes because she wasn’t smokin’ hot?

    • Rat on a train

      Adams said that white-collar workers who continued working from home were hurting service-oriented businesses that rely on a steady stream of customers captive audience.

      • Pope Jimbo

        Yeah, what about the neighborhood thugs? Who are they going to mug if the rich people don’t come into the city?

        Also, I would think that the drop in commuters is super good for Mother Gaia. Think of all the carbon not being pumped into the air because people stay home.

        It couldn’t be that Adams is worried about his fat cat buddies who own a lot of commercial real estate in the city? The people who are going to lose their shirts if people don’t start coming back down town.

      • Rat on a train

        Also, I would think that the drop in commuters is super good for Mother Gaia. Think of all the carbon not being pumped into the air because people stay home.
        No. I’ve heard the drop in people commuting makes driving more attractive so people leave public transit to drive which makes the Earth cry.

      • juris imprudent

        drop in commuters

        You say that like mass transit doesn’t keep running regardless of ridership.

      • Rat on a train

        Not only does it keep running, but some are increasing service to encourage ridership, so long as taxpayers continue to subsidize the loses.

      • rhywun

        Not afraid of any of that.

        I am sick of the mask mandates and where the fuck am I going to eat lunch with my Papiere?

        End the bullshit theater – ALL of it* – and I will consider returning to the office.

        *Some of it is mandated by Joe

      • rhywun

        *without Papiere

      • Sensei

        I’m not afraid of it either. But I believe my risk of actual harm is greater from a crazy or physical violence than if I catch COVID.

      • rhywun

        Maybe, maybe not.

        The crime rate is still hugely below where it was when I moved here a couple decades ago, and I have never witnessed any personally. FWIW, the cities where I grew up and went to college are WAY more dangerous in comparison, and I have plenty of personal experience of crime in one of those places.

        The fact of the matter is that this isn’t 1990. The risk is still pretty damn small in this city.

      • Sensei

        You and I came at the same time. I remember the 90s.

        And I came from Philly…

  24. The Late P Brooks

    Bad Orange Jumpsuit Man

    Former U.S. Army prosecutor Glenn Kirschner predicted that former President Donald Trump “will be indicted,” asserting that his “days are numbered.”

    Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Arthur Engoron ruled last Thursday that Trump and two of his adult children, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump, must comply with subpoenas and answer questions under oath as part of an investigation led by New York Attorney General Letitia James. Kirschner on Saturday uploaded a short video to Twitter, overviewing that decision and providing his analysis of the situation.

    “Donald Trump will be indicted,” Kirschner asserted. “I’m not sure which jurisdiction will indict him first but he will be indicted.”

    Fap fap fap.

    And then what? We’ll all live happily ever after?

    Banana republic, here we come.

    • Pope Jimbo

      Well he won’t be able to run in 2024 and clean the Dems clock.

      Personally if I were a Dem I’d want Trump to run again in 2024. He’s got so many negatives and his recent bragging about the vax and pushing for everyone to get vaxxed isn’t endearing himself to the base.

      If you pull a bunch of blatant legal shenanigans to bar Trump from running, you are freeing the GOP from a potentially bruising fight. Someone like Desantis will be able to get the nomination without alienating the Trumpistas.

      Of course if I was a Dem I’d be wondering who I could run in 2024 that wasn’t crazy, corrupt or both.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        ?

      • Pope Jimbo

        It seems like their thought is “Sure we will lose to a Republican, but as long as it isn’t Trump we don’t care”.

      • Urthona

        Yeah there’s no strategy here. They just really really hate Trump.

        It’s not dissimilar from republicans wanting to see Hillary punished. They’re probably better off with her being an active democrat, but they understandably hate her.

      • Claypoolsreservoir

        Quite different actually. Hillary actually committed said crimes. Donald trump likely didn’t commit these trumped up crimes (no pun intended).

        This is akin to trying to indict Hillary for the murder of various persons connected to her over the year, as opposed to trying to indict her for having a private server of classified material that she wiped when the law came knocking…

      • juris imprudent

        Which is crazy because the only thing that really unites and energizes Democrats is having Trump to run against.

    • rhywun

      The walls are closing in!

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      This is why you don’t put Schlitz in your water bottle.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        How did I never see that one before?

      • Nephilium

        You’re not my supervisor!

    • PieInTheSky

      should have brought his cape and sword

    • JaimeRoberto (shama/lama/ding dong)

      That race looks awesome. I might do it next year.

  25. Sean

    Shower time. Bbl.

    • Festus

      That’s a fine reminder to “wash yo ass!” Redd Foxx RIP

      • Pope Jimbo

        Way to assume his gender! Sean might be going to a baby shower. Hanging out with his girls and celebrating life.

    • PieInTheSky

      twice a year whether needed or not…

    • Ownbestenemy

      db – saw your message. Replied.

      • Ownbestenemy

        Who was it that was going to the LP convention? Was that a local, state or national one?

  26. The Late P Brooks

    We can purge our way to peace and harmonious unity.

    It hasn’t ever worked in the past, but that’s no reason to listen to the naysayers. This is the 21st century. We’ll get it right this time.

    • juris imprudent

      The virtual world people actually can, that is until they inevitably turn on each other.

      • Compelled Speechless

        It won’t take long. Once they all realize that none of them have the skills to work anything that is required for actual survival. See the Soviet Union after the farmer purges. All the time we spend hysterically scream about the lessons we need to learn from the rise of the Nazis while the left does everything in its power to pretend like the hundreds of failed leftist controlled regimes over the past hundred years didn’t happen. I have to wonder if they actually do want to “get it right this time.”

    • Pope Jimbo

      Preachy Eastern Europeans!

      How many times have you seen this in the EU transcripts:

      Romain: Let us …

      • Drake

        I did like the way they eventually took care of their tyrant.

      • Compelled Speechless

        I had to look this up. I’m a sucker for a story with a happy ending.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      As Joe Rogan might say, “I can afford people medicine, motherfucker.”

    • Ownbestenemy

      Why wouldn’t they? Proper dosage is safe as all hell so if it works, great, if not, you move on to another treatement. That is what has pissed so many people off here in the States.

  27. The Late P Brooks

    Punching down

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk took to Twitter on Sunday to slam claims made by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) about his taxes.

    Musk responded to a tweet containing a video of last week’s CNN interview with Warren, during which she says Musk pays “zero” in taxes.

    “You know how much he paid in taxes? One of the richest people in the world? Zero,” Warren said.

    ——-

    Musk refuted the Massachusetts senator’s claims, saying he not only pays taxes but made history with his tax payments last year.

    Musk has owed $11 billion in taxes after trading Tesla shares.

    “Will visit IRS next time I’m in DC just to say hi, since I paid the most taxes ever in history for an individual last year,” he wrote in a tweet. “Maybe I can have a cookie or something …”

    The senator and tech titan have feuded before over Musk’s income, notably in December when he referred to her as an “angry mom” after she accused of him of “freeloading.”

    It should be illegal to mansplain to a United States Senator. That’s like betting on the Special Olympics.

    • Ownbestenemy

      I don’t know if I blame the media or education for this continued lie and convenient political wedge. Honest fact checkers would be able to squash this back when Buffett and his secretary made this bullshit claim but they will give us “technically….” answers.

    • creech

      How would Fauxcahontas know about Musk’s taxes? Isn’t it a federal crime for IRS to release individual taxpayer information? She’s claiming, in public, to know something that shouldn’t be bandied about. Musk ought to sue her, subject her to discovery, and get her to testify – plead the 5th if she wants.

  28. The Late P Brooks

    her victims — all of whom were between the ages of 14 and 17 — and offered them items such as vape pens in exchange for sex.

    Oh, no, please don’t throw me in that briar patch over and over and over!

    • Pope Jimbo

      I blame the inherent sexism of math for the double standard when it comes to teacher/student relationships.

      In this example, it is easy to see how many times 16 goes into 38. If the sexes were reversed, people get mad because calculating how many times 38 goes into 16 is much harder.

      • Ownbestenemy

        2 pump chump confirmed.

    • Compelled Speechless

      If I were here lawyer, I would negotiate that she goes to a male juvenile facility as part of her plea. That’s how you troll.

    • Urthona

      yes!!!!

    • Fatty Bolger

      But it looks like eggs do. Half a century of medical consensus out the window.

    • Pope Jimbo

      Are you sure you didn’t view that through your pro-pie blinders?

    • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

      Lesbians Gays Bisexuals Trans People Of Color Over The Road?

      • kinnath

        Lesbians Gays Bisexuals Trans People Of Color of the rings

    • Fatty Bolger

      LMAO

  29. Ownbestenemy

    I see the subtle narrative shift for the truckers is they were now planning on overthrowing the government? lol I guess if that worked here in the States, why not try it in Canada.

    • The Other Kevin

      If you successfully claim that, then anyone who did anything at all to support them was supporting the overthrow of the government. Which makes it very easy to go after anyone who disagrees with the government.

  30. Plisade

    A friend sent me a video of this dude, Aubrey Cottle, aka Kirtaner, bragging about hacking Givesendgo. I went down that rabbit hole for a bit this morning, reading about hacking, which I don’t really understand.

    Do any of you know why he wouldn’t be arrested for stuff like what he’s done? He openly brags about hacking all kinds of things. He’s been photographed, has bio’s online. Is his location a secret? What’s the deal?

    • Ownbestenemy

      Right thinker that stopped the overthrow of Canada?

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      FYTW

      Or, same reason they largely ignore Antifa.

    • Allen

      I don’t have a good answer for you. In college, I did computer security research, and we found several available vulnerabilities we could have exploited to control systems owned by others. Something that’s branded into you doing this kind of work is that you’d better be sure you have specific permission from the people you’re attacking, otherwise its a crime (specifically, a felony) that can have severe consequences. Specifically, while I’m not a lawyer, I believe it’s a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (the same act that Aaron Swartz was charged with), which has potentially substantial consequences.

      I think that likely this is just a prioritisation thing– the government doesn’t really care about this crime. But I haven’t been down the rabbit hole.

    • Semi-Spartan Dad

      I’m guessing he’s an informant for a 3 letter agency. The Givesendgo hack doesn’t even have to be related, but the informant status gives him a shield unless the gov decides to revoke (which they won’t).

      • Zwak,The Baddest Johnny on the Apple Cart

        Yeah, it’s pretty clear at this point the True-Doh! gov’t wants this kind of shit to happen to the wrongthinkers.

  31. Rebel Scum

    Perusing CFP links after not having viewed much news over the past week I see that the Democratic People’s Republic of Canukistan has gone full fascist with a gang of thugs police force that might not be entirely domestic. And the Canadian Crime Family government is threatening to treat all protesters as terrorists even if/when they disperse. Interesting times…

    ///AlexJonesWasRight

    • Rebel Scum

      And elected representatives are being censored for bringing up queries from their constituents regarding facts that are verifiable against the censors’ lies to the contrary.

    • UnCivilServant

      Clearly we need to send a bunch of Indiana firearms further north.

    • creech

      Won’t tactics like these lead a number of Canadians to conclude “I’ve nothing left to lose” and actually start to take out politicians by means other than the ballot box? J.W. Booth had a damned good portion of his life still ahead of him; however, some 70 year old Canadian trucker may just figure “sic semper tyrannis.”

      • Name's BEAM. James BEAM.

        Not just pols. A number of cops that were involved in the violence against the truckers have already been doxxed, and I assume more will be in the coming days — it’s pretty hard to stop the so-called “weaponized autistics” of sites like 4chan. I expect Canada’s going to see a number of “midnight runs” on cops and their families in the months/years ahead. Looking over your shoulder for the rest of your life isn’t all that enjoyable.

  32. wdalasio

    Adams said that white-collar workers who continued working from home were hurting service-oriented businesses that rely on a steady stream of customers.

    You know what? Screw ’em. I remember the comments from service workers in NYC about “finance bros” or “Stern kiddies” or whatnot. And this is coming from people I had thought I was on passingly good terms with. Now they want to cry in their beers about people they held in contempt not being around to foot the bill anymore? Why should I care? This is, by the accounts they rendered, the world they wanted. I’ve found that the service workers in a lot of the rest of the country are just as happy to take my money and are willing to be civil in the process. If New York service workers want to be the “champions of the proletarian revolution”, let them do so on proletarian tips.

    • rhywun

      The businesses that were hurt closed a year and a half ago.

      Nobody is running a service-oriented business at a loss these days in hopes that the laptop class will come back.

      • rhywun

        PS. What about the service-oriented business near where the laptop class live? The neighborhood pizza places and sub shops. Why don’t they matter? They’d be flying high if it wasn’t for bullshit theater imposed by blue governments.

        There is nothing etched in stone that says a worker has to be fed lunch in Manhattan and not Brooklyn or Islip or Carlstadt.

      • wdalasio

        It’s the mindset. They think they’re entitled to your business. Adams’ entire argument ignores the question of what makes the life of the “laptop workers” more rewarding or enjoyable. Nope. They don’t matter as anything but cash cows. They’re supposed to foot the bill and shut the hell up. They’re there to support the local service workers (and, of course, the commercial real estate owners) who need their free cash flow. And when they’re insulted, they’re supposed to nod along and pretend they’re honored to be insulted. Because why not. They’re there to pay the bills and shut up.

        You’ll notice that Adams didn’t deign to spare a word about how New York can make it so that “that accountant that’s not in his office space” is motivated to go back to NYC. Nope. He should just do it out of duty.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        the commercial real estate owners

        This particular lobby has been ignored quite a bit. I think they’re starting to squawk a little more as certain doom encroaches upon them.

        They shouldn’t get special treatment but if it forces NYC to back off, then great.

      • Pope Jimbo

        I know a guy in commercial real estate in Minnesoda. He is predicting a huge bailout for the people that own downtown office buildings.

        Everyone left during the pandemic and now no one wants to go back. Not only because of the pandemic rules but because the “Defund the Police” movement has made downtown dangerous too.

        All those suburban women who are the second income have said “FUCK NO” when asked to come back.

        Target shifting tons of jobs from its downtown offices to the suburbs is a huge blow.

        My buddy jokingly says that the city will buy the owners out and convert to “affordable housing”.

      • wdalasio

        but if it forces NYC to back off, then great.

        It won’t. Because, they have the same mindset. They think they’ve bought a riskless cashflow that can only pay them off. Think the medallion owners before Uber. Only on a scale of hundreds of millions of dollars.

        It’s hard to erase a hundred years of history. For decades, they had a captive market. If you wanted to be in finance or advertising or whatnot, New York was the place to be. So the entire class that had to be there to play in those businesses could be treated basically like crap. Because, as much as they were screwed over, they weren’t going anywhere because that’s where their jobs were. The pandemic may have changed that. The pandemic kind of proved that ubiquitous broadband internet obviated the previous need for physical proximity. You can build the same spreadsheet models in Jacksonville, FL, West Islip, NY, or Cordesville, SC that you can build in Manhattan.

        I think the commercial real estate owners don’t see that handwriting on the wall. They’re too invested in the status quo. I think their pushback isn’t going to be about pushing NYC to be a more attractive place to live or work. It’s going to be about how they can force people to go back there.

      • slumbrew

        We’re officially (mostly) not going back – leadership, to their credit, has said “ok, we’ll start looking to sublet space in our brand new (2019) 19 story headquarters”.

        I think leadership at a lot of places might balk at that.

      • rhywun

        My company recently (within the last 5 or 6 years) opened a 20-story operational HQ in a downtown (not NYC). There’s a lot of back and forth about trying to get butts back in seats there.

      • Rat on a train

        I don’t expect to be brought back to an office. I lead a team spread out across the US. The closest two people on the team are over 100 miles apart. We get together once a quarter.

      • Gender Traitor

        So far I’ve heard no talk about bringing back the remote workers from my office – a one-story mix of enclosed offices and cubes on the outskirts of a Dayton suburb, with just a few light industrial neighbors. I don’t know if those of us who work onsite are just going to keep rattling around this largely empty building or if the head honchos will look for smaller digs. I just hope we don’t move any further across town from my house. ?

      • rhywun

        Yup, and they have a LOT of pull in places like NYC.

  33. The Late P Brooks

    Climate justice

    Nearly 13B cubic feet of new natural gas capacity in the U.S. may be subject to new policy changes by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which will now increase emphasis on the environmental impacts of proposed pipeline projects, Bloomberg reports.

    In the regulator’s first policy update since 1999, FERC voted Thursday along party lines to begin considering how proposed gas projects could affect climate change, how they would affect local communities seen as most subject to pollution, and whether such projects are even in the public interest; any project expected to emit 100K metric tons/year of CO2 equivalent emissions “will be deemed to have a significant impact on climate change.”

    ——-

    FERC Chairman Richard Glick said the policy changes will provide more clarity to pipeline developers on how the commission will balance the need to expand affordable natural gas to customers against environmental interests.

    They only want what’s best for us.

    Buy more sweaters.

    • rhywun

      Or, just die.

    • Pope Jimbo

      How about justice for big utilities? Wisconsin legislature may pass bill to grant utilities a monopoly on building transmission lines.

      Wisconsin is the latest Midwest state legislature to consider legislation that would give incumbent utilities the right to build long-range transmission projects without competition from outside bidders.

      SB838/AB892 would give incumbent utilities the “right of first refusal” (ROFR) for planned transmission projects that connect existing transmission infrastructure also owned by incumbent utilities.

      The measure’s primary backer, American Transmission Company, once opposed such bills when it sought to compete for projects in outside territory.

      Now, ATC maintains that incumbent utilities have local expertise and experience making them best suited to build transmission in their areas, and a right-of-first-refusal law would “control the reliability of the grid in the state by preventing the introduction of disparate developers constructing a hodgepodge of projects,” said Bill Marsan, ATC executive vice president and general counsel.

      The Dakotas, Iowa and Minnesoda have already passed similar bills. My guess is that this is a payoff to Excel Energy for going along with the mandates to have X% of electricity come from renewables.

      A functioning republic would string up legislators for engaging in such blatant cronyism.

      • juris imprudent

        Yay “democracy”!

  34. Q Continuum

    “He arrives each day to tackle a familiar conundrum: how to prevent Spokane from developing the same kinds of problems that people like him are moving there to escape.”

    Easy: don’t elect Democrats for anything including dog-catcher.

  35. Count Potato

    “Ivermectin does NOT stop Covid patients from becoming severely ill, trial reveals…

    However, both doctors and patients knew which group the patients had been assigned to, and this kind of ‘open-label’ trial design could have introduced bias, potentially overestimating the effect of the drug, the researchers said.

    The results of the trial were published on Friday in the JAMA Internal Medicine.”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-10528177/Ivermectin-ineffective-preventing-severe-COVID-19-study.html

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      I saw that. I know that there’s been some criticism of the trial but I haven’t read it yet. The typical naysayers have jumped all over it, but the results seem to lie way outside what others have been seeing.

      Not saying it isn’t a good study, but I want to see the debate first.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        The typical “ivermectin” naysayers…

    • UnCivilServant

      Unless the money is stolen or otherwise not his to dispose of, I’m not seeing why this is news.

      • Count Potato

        Because it’s ridiculous behavior?

      • Name's BEAM. James BEAM.

        I’ve said that for decades about my rellies in Normandy and friends/rellies in The Netherlands and Germany. They simply will not drink out of the tap; all water meant for drinking comes as bottles bought at the store. It’s kinda eye-opening to go into a French hypermarché and see several huge aisles filled with nothing but bottled water in all shapes and sizes.

      • slumbrew

        Apollinaris *is* pretty tasty, TBF.

      • rhywun

        TBH, I don’t like tap water either. I either want milk or something with bubbles.

        That said, I don’t refuse it or waste money on water in bottles.

  36. Rebel Scum

    And there is this.

    Ottawa’s mayor says any vehicles seized during the police crackdown on the occupation of the downtown should be sold to cover costs incurred by the city.

    “We actually have the ability to confiscate those vehicles and sell them,” Mayor Jim Watson said Saturday.

    “And I want to see them sold. I don’t want the return to these people who’ve been causing such frustration and angst in our community.”

    The mayor told CBC News that Ottawa has that power due to the Emergencies Act, which was invoked by the federal government last week.

    Steal people’s property and eliminate their means to a livelihood. Let them eat cake, I guess.

    • slumbrew

      “Due what now? Due process? I’m not familiar with the term.”

    • Ownbestenemy

      Notice his reasoning is “frustration and angst” and not, I don’t know…any law other than their overarching yet to be debated Emergencies Act.

      • rhywun

        They’re going full-blown totalitarian over blocking streets and blowing horns. OK, really it’s over wrongthink but they’ll never admit that.

    • Pope Jimbo

      Where are the trucks full of food? How come our grocery stores are empty?

      That is what the mayor would be asking in a just world.

  37. slumbrew

    I wonder how many leftys are troubled by what’s happening in Canada? Sure, they’re punishing bad people, but surely some leftys understand “me today, you tomorrow”, right?

    • robc

      Does Greenwald count? Based on his twitter, very few other lefties are troubled by it.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        I just ignore the replies to Greenwald. Ever since he crossed over to the dark side, he’s been flooded by trolls, bots, and lunatics.

        They’re obsessed with him.

  38. DEG

    Huh. Is commenting working?

    • slumbrew

      Yep.

      • DEG

        Ahh… I guess something doesn’t like my rumble link. I tried posting a rumble link to a video calling for a general strike in Canada. That post is.. .nowhere.

      • DEG

        Nope, in the spam queue.

    • kinnath

      yes

    • Tres Cool

      Man mugs mimes with meat; millions make merry!

      • Plinker762

        Feces flung at fucking facists

    • rhywun

      I couldn’t make it far in that.

      All I can say is, knock yourself out, hon. And leave me the fuck alone.

    • Ownbestenemy

      Yet indoor dining, which is associated with increasing COVID-19 transmission rates

      That’s news to me…

      …their windows fogged up from the breath of maskless patrons.

      What a broken person. Stay home then.

      • rhywun

        That’s news to me…

        Yeah, that stuck out.

        Pretty sure the studies said the exact opposite.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      A fairly open call for mob rule.

      I expect to hear no complaints when it’s turned on her.

  39. Plinker762

    I moved to Spokane in ’89 and the dislike for relocating Californians was strong then. Nobody seemed to object to a single guy moving from a tiny state like New Hampshire. I came out here just in time to help vote out Tom Foley when he was Speaker of the House after he voted for the “Assault Weapon” ban and sued the voters for trying to introduce term limits.

    There has been a steady decrease in the quality of life here as the population has grown and the slow merger of the surrounding towns into one big sprawl. Matching the timeline of the article, I noticed traffic started to get much worse around 2014. Since them, almost all the road construction in the city has been “improvements” such as bike lanes and turning 4 lane arterials into two lane (w/ center turn lane) roads to improve “life quality” and attract new comers.

  40. hayeksplosives

    Here in sunny Pahrump Nevada we have an all-day “wind advisory” today. Right now, it’s still as can be, no leaf twitching. But when they forecast wind, it usually means they ain’t kidding.

    So for now I’m sitting out on the patio in the sun. It’s only 58 degrees but it feels awesome in the sun.

    I am going to suffer during desert summer, but for now it is bliss.